Once a connection to a database server has been successfully
established, the functions described here are used to perform
SQL queries and commands.
PQresultStatus
Returns the result status of the query.
ExecStatusType PQresultStatus(const PGresult *res)
PQresultStatus can return one of the following values:
PGRES_EMPTY_QUERY -- The string sent to the backend was empty.
PGRES_COMMAND_OK -- Successful completion of a command returning no data
PGRES_TUPLES_OK -- The query successfully executed
PGRES_COPY_OUT -- Copy Out (from server) data transfer started
PGRES_COPY_IN -- Copy In (to server) data transfer started
PGRES_BAD_RESPONSE -- The server's response was not understood
PGRES_NONFATAL_ERROR
PGRES_FATAL_ERROR
If the result status is PGRES_TUPLES_OK, then the
routines described below can be used to retrieve the
tuples returned by the query. Note that a SELECT that
happens to retrieve zero tuples still shows PGRES_TUPLES_OK.
PGRES_COMMAND_OK is for commands that can never return tuples
(INSERT, UPDATE, etc.). A response of PGRES_EMPTY_QUERY often
exposes a bug in the client software.PQresStatus
Converts the enumerated type returned by PQresultStatus into
a string constant describing the status code.
char *PQresStatus(ExecStatusType status);
PQresultErrorMessage
returns the error message associated with the query, or an empty string
if there was no error.
char *PQresultErrorMessage(const PGresult *res);
Immediately following a PQexec or PQgetResult
call, PQerrorMessage (on the connection) will return the same
string as PQresultErrorMessage (on the result). However, a
PGresult will retain its error message
until destroyed, whereas the connection's error message will change when
subsequent operations are done. Use PQresultErrorMessage when you want to
know the status associated with a particular PGresult; use PQerrorMessage
when you want to know the status from the latest operation on the connection.PQntuples
Returns the number of tuples (instances)
in the query result.
int PQntuples(const PGresult *res);
PQnfields
Returns the number of fields
(attributes) in each tuple of the query result.
int PQnfields(const PGresult *res);
PQbinaryTuples
Returns 1 if the PGresult contains binary tuple data,
0 if it contains ASCII data.
int PQbinaryTuples(const PGresult *res);
Currently, binary tuple data can only be returned by a query that
extracts data from a BINARY cursor.PQfname
Returns the field (attribute) name associated with the given field index.
Field indices start at 0.
char *PQfname(const PGresult *res,
int field_index);
PQfnumber
Returns the field (attribute) index
associated with the given field name.
int PQfnumber(const PGresult *res,
const char *field_name);
-1 is returned if the given name does not match any field.
PQftype
Returns the field type associated with the
given field index. The integer returned is an
internal coding of the type. Field indices start
at 0.
Oid PQftype(const PGresult *res,
int field_num);
You can query the system table pg_type to obtain
the name and properties of the various datatypes. The OIDs
of the built-in datatypes are defined in src/include/catalog/pg_type.h
in the source tree.PQfsize
Returns the size in bytes of the field
associated with the given field index.
Field indices start at 0.
int PQfsize(const PGresult *res,
int field_index);
PQfsize returns the space allocated for this field in a database
tuple, in other words the size of the server's binary representation
of the data type. -1 is returned if the field is variable size.PQfmod
Returns the type-specific modification data of the field
associated with the given field index.
Field indices start at 0.
int PQfmod(const PGresult *res,
int field_index);
PQgetvalue
Returns a single field (attribute) value of one tuple
of a PGresult.
Tuple and field indices start at 0.
char* PQgetvalue(const PGresult *res,
int tup_num,
int field_num);
For most queries, the value returned by PQgetvalue
is a null-terminated ASCII string representation
of the attribute value. But if PQbinaryTuples() is 1,
the value returned by PQgetvalue is the binary
representation of the
type in the internal format of the backend server
(but not including the size word, if the field is variable-length).
It is then the programmer's responsibility to cast and
convert the data to the correct C type. The pointer
returned by PQgetvalue points to storage that is
part of the PGresult structure. One should not modify it,
and one must explicitly
copy the value into other storage if it is to
be used past the lifetime of the PGresult structure itself.PQgetlength
Returns the length of a field (attribute) in bytes.
Tuple and field indices start at 0.
int PQgetlength(const PGresult *res,
int tup_num,
int field_num);
This is the actual data length for the particular data value, that is the
size of the object pointed to by PQgetvalue. Note that for ASCII-represented
values, this size has little to do with the binary size reported by PQfsize.PQgetisnull
Tests a field for a NULL entry.
Tuple and field indices start at 0.
int PQgetisnull(const PGresult *res,
int tup_num,
int field_num);
This function returns 1 if the field contains a NULL, 0 if
it contains a non-null value. (Note that PQgetvalue
will return an empty string, not a null pointer, for a NULL
field.)PQcmdStatus
Returns the command status string from the SQL command that
generated the PGresult.
char * PQcmdStatus(const PGresult *res);
PQcmdTuples
Returns the number of rows affected by the SQL command.
char * PQcmdTuples(const PGresult *res);
If the SQL command that generated the
PGresult was INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE, this returns a
string containing the number of rows affected. If the
command was anything else, it returns the empty string.PQoidValue
Returns the object id of the tuple
inserted, if the SQL command was an INSERT.
Otherwise, returns InvalidOid.
Oid PQoidValue(const PGresult *res);
The type Oid and the constant InvalidOid
will be defined if you include the libpq
header file. They will both be some integer type.PQoidStatus
Returns a string with the object id of the tuple
inserted, if the SQL command was an INSERT.
Otherwise, returns an empty string.
char * PQoidStatus(const PGresult *res);
This function is deprecated in favor of PQoidValue
and is not thread-safe.PQprint
Prints out all the tuples and, optionally, the
attribute names to the specified output stream.
void PQprint(FILE* fout, /* output stream */
const PGresult *res,
const PQprintOpt *po);
struct {
pqbool header; /* print output field headings and row count */
pqbool align; /* fill align the fields */
pqbool standard; /* old brain dead format */
pqbool html3; /* output html tables */
pqbool expanded; /* expand tables */
pqbool pager; /* use pager for output if needed */
char *fieldSep; /* field separator */
char *tableOpt; /* insert to HTML table ... */
char *caption; /* HTML caption */
char **fieldName; /* null terminated array of replacement field names */
} PQprintOpt;
This function was formerly used by psql
to print query results, but this is no longer the case and this
function is no longer actively supported.PQclear
Frees the storage associated with the PGresult.
Every query result should be freed via PQclear when
it is no longer needed.
void PQclear(PQresult *res);
You can keep a PGresult object around for as long as you
need it; it does not go away when you issue a new query,
nor even if you close the connection. To get rid of it,
you must call PQclear. Failure to do this will
result in memory leaks in the frontend application.PQmakeEmptyPGresult
Constructs an empty PGresult object with the given status.
PGresult* PQmakeEmptyPGresult(PGconn *conn, ExecStatusType status);
This is libpq's internal routine to allocate and initialize an empty
PGresult object. It is exported because some applications find it
useful to generate result objects (particularly objects with error
status) themselves. If conn is not NULL and status indicates an error,
the connection's current errorMessage is copied into the PGresult.
Note that PQclear should eventually be called on the object, just
as with a PGresult returned by libpq itself.